The Dana Show with Dana Loesch - Absurd Truth: Scott Jennings FTW Once Again
Episode Date: August 29, 2025The CNN Thunderdome gets heated when the topic of biological men gets brought up to Scott Jennings. Meanwhile, an Irish travel influencer is accused of exploiting a remote “cannibal tribe” for Tik...Tok views.Thank you for supporting our sponsors that make The Dana Show possible…All Family Pharmacyhttps://AllFamilyPharmacy.com/Dana Start today and take your health back with All Family Pharmacy. Use code DANA10 for savings and enjoy your health, your choice, no more waiting, no more “no’s.”Webroothttps://WebRoot.com/Dana Protect your digital life and get 50% off Webroot Total Protection or Essentials, exclusively with my URL!Relief Factorhttps://ReliefFactor.com OR CALL 1-800-4-RELIEFBoost anti-inflammatory power with Relief Factor. Get their 3-week Relief Factor Quick Start for only $19.95 today! Byrnahttps://Byrna.com/danaGet your hands on the new compact Byrna CL. Visit Byrna.com/Dana receive 10% off Patriot Mobilehttps://PatriotMobile.com/DanaDana’s personal cell phone provider is Patriot Mobile. Get a FREE MONTH of service code DANAHumanNhttps://HumanN.comSupport your cholesterol health with SuperBerine and the #1 bestselling SuperBeets Heart Chews—both on sale for $5 off at Sam’s Club. Boost your metabolic health and save!Keltechttps://KelTecWeapons.comSee the third generation of the iconic SUB2000 and the NEW PS57 - Keltec Innovation & Performance at its best.
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Dana Lash's absurd truth podcast, sponsored by Keltek.
It's his life mission to make bad decisions.
It's time for Florida Man.
That's right.
It's time for Florida, man.
This is Craig Collins filling in on the Dana Lash Radio and X on Twitter.
A great ways to stay connected to her.
I love all three of the Florida Man stories that producer Kane sent along.
I'm going to go ahead and count them down in reverse order, though, because this is the radio.
and we like countdowns of things.
And actually, you know what?
I have audio.
I'm going to like Casey Kasem.
Help me count these down.
So number three, as far as the best Florida man's stories of today, according to me.
Three.
Thank you, Casey, for saying that out there.
Number three is a Florida man that woke up a woman by mumbling stuff next to her bed.
The man who was a stranger to her had broken into her house.
That's terrifying.
And then once he got there, he, I guess, got close to the bed and didn't get in.
Thank God.
But just started saying stuff that was incoherent.
and he definitely seemed intoxicated.
The woman, when she woke up, yelled at him.
Excuse me, I had to sneeze there.
The woman yelled at him, and then I might have to sneeze again during the show.
I'll do my best to try to handle it.
But anyway, he decided to leave because of the yelling and whatnot.
But he didn't go very far.
The guy opened up her car, which I guess was unlocked.
That's kind of her fault.
And then went to sleep in the backseat.
When the cops eventually arrived, they arrested the guy who refused to get out of the car in his own.
And Elijah Spencer was charged with multiple problems.
a burglary of an unoccupied dwelling.
He took fruit snacks and stuff from her house.
Burglary of an unoccupied conveyance.
That would be inside the vehicle.
Criminal mischief and then resisting an officer without violence.
They're just saying no until eventually he was pulled out of the car.
But what a weird dude.
But he only comes in at number three on my list.
And Casey.
Hi, it's me, Casey.
Again, glad to have you with us.
Let's do number two on this list.
Two. Thank you, sir.
A number two of the best Florida man stories of today.
is the Florida man whose Trump house has gone very viral until social media, on TikTok and other places.
He lives in an elite neighborhood in Florida.
He fought the county several times for these giant signs, these huge like things, banners that he hung up on his house, that are all Trump things.
Some things say like legend, bulletproof.
There's a bunch of other ones.
He's been dealing with this since 2021, fighting back and forth with the city.
eventually he won a lawsuit saying that any kind of fines they tried to charge him were inappropriate
and they actually had to pay his legal fees, which is like $42,000, which seems great for the guy.
But now he's even more popular than ever on social media and continues to put out new banners,
more American flags and all kinds of things to be pro-Trump.
Some of his banners, which all have photos of the president, say things like, Who's Your Daddy?
Trump coming home in 2025.
and as I said again,
a one's like bulletproof.
A whole bunch of people reacted on social media recently
some of the videos he put up
by saying how much they love the house
and how much they like to,
you know,
stop and take photos with him or at the house
when they pass it.
It's literally becoming a tourist attraction.
The guy with the pro-Trump house
that tried to be fined and stopped
by a city council
and they inevitably failed.
All right,
that was good for number two.
One.
Thank you, Casey.
I'm the number one story
in the world of Florida man.
The best story out there to me
is the guy in Batman pajamas
who stopped a criminal.
A Florida man described what it was like
to be woken up
and noticed that his car was being robbed.
It was in his neighbor's garage, I think he'll tell you.
And unfortunately,
bad things were happening.
And so he sprung to action
and he just so happened to be wearing
his Batman pajamas when he did it,
which is hilarious to me.
You want to make fun of an adult man
wearing Batman pajamas,
but you want to respect a hero who apprehends a bad guy and holds him until cops arrive.
So it's a little bit of like, I'm not sure what way to go with this story, but here it is.
She checked it and she woke me up.
She's like, hey, someone's rummaging through your truck.
So I called them.
I said, hey, your garage is open and my truck was just broken into.
So I'm going to sit outside until you guys secure your garage without the person seeing me.
And I grabbed a hold of their shirt and their right wrist.
I said, listen, don't try to get away.
I have plenty of experience with this.
I'm really glad I had my Batman pajamas on because that gave me the extra confidence that I needed.
That is hilarious that he said that at the end there too, and the guy was rocking,
rocking actual Batman pajamas.
And it's real.
It looks like the Batman outfit with the fake utility belt and everything.
Man, yes, nine times out of 10, or I would go even further, 99 times out of 100.
I'm making fun of a friend of mine who admits they still have Batman pajamas as an adult man.
The one time I'm potentially not doing it is if the guy also happened to stop a robbery of his own vehicle and keep a man in custody until police arrived while wearing the Batman pajamas.
This is fantastic.
And I do really like the fact that he says that it added in his confidence because that's usually not true of adult men wearing Batman pajamas.
Confidence is usually not the byproduct of that decision.
But it is here.
And it is to a great degree.
So again, I love that story so much.
Thank you, Casey, for everything you did to help.
Sure.
All right, that's fine. He seems excited.
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By the way, actually, you know what?
I just remembered I have this audio, too.
This happened on CNN, where you have the one individual on CNN who's willing to actually say stuff that sort of makes sense, Scott Jennings, or oftentimes actually does make sense now.
And the rest of the group who are just terrible, horrible people saying terrible, horrible things, it's honestly the best way I could possibly say that.
That's the best way I could summarize the things that actually occur there.
But Jennings did get in an argument with several people about the whole, can men pop out babies,
which just real quick, before I say anything else about it, is one of the more amusing things to me
that has become a discussion point between the left and the right.
Because if you rewind a certain amount of years and you say to yourself, man, I wonder what the
political arguments are going to be, not many people would come up with the idea that men and women
are going to be debated as to whether or not all of them can make babies,
whether or not it's a thing that men can do at all.
That's not a discussion point that you have any level of expectation
eventually being a reality in the world.
And yet, darn it, it currently is.
And so when the left wonders how they're losing support with people,
it may be just a little bit because they seem to blatantly disregard very obvious facts
if they think that it somehow hurts them and their political opinions
or the optics of their, their, you know, opinions.
And it's insane to watch these things happen.
But here, case and point is this back and forth with Scott Jennings,
where he's talking to people about, you know, if men can pop out a baby.
And it's just, again, to me, sort of amazing,
that this is the kind of thing where people want to, you know,
object to the style of conversation or the focus on these issues.
They're acting as though this isn't important.
And it obviously is, I'll tell you why in a second.
Here we go.
I just have to say, he did use the term pregnant people in his residency.
Oh, come on.
I'm sorry.
If that's like the way you're, if that is like the way you're presenting it for me.
And there's questions about your credit of it.
Is that?
Scott, it's like, it's so amazing.
I love that sound.
I love that Scott is saying.
And it's actually really annoying.
So I don't, I don't love the actual sound of it.
But I love the fact that it occurred.
That's maybe a bad.
better way to say that. What's so awesome about this, in my opinion, is that he's saying that
I don't trust the professional opinion of a medical person who doesn't acknowledge that women
are the only people who can have babies, which is very rational. If I were to be sitting down
with a doctor before a checkup, new doctor trying him out, seeing if this is somebody that I'm going
like or not, and we're just having a casual conversation about some of their beliefs, and
they mention to me that they think men can have babies.
I'm pretty sure they didn't get their degree from any sort of real medical college,
and I immediately leave.
I'm like, you know what?
We don't need to do the physical.
I will maybe see if something needs to be worked out down the road,
but you have a good day, sir.
It's a very obvious moment where you're like, okay,
this person has abandoned medical opinions for the sake of some sort of political loss
that they think is a win.
It's not a ruse.
He really wrote it down.
We are talking about this guy's not credible to me.
That's all of them doing.
Are you serious?
Come on.
He is not credible.
No, no, no, are you serious that this is a book?
Yes, he did write it.
Of all the things that we're talking about here, immunizations, vaccines, autism,
the research on communicable diseases, on cancer,
and you are the most concerned about someone's use of the word people.
No, no, no, birthing people, not just the word people.
I'm sure that there's a lot of other times where this guy had used the word people
that I would not have a problem with,
and Scott Jennings would not have a problem with.
The deterioration of the respect for the difference between men and women is hurting women.
And they know it.
And they don't care about it.
It's crazy to hear them say this stuff, though.
It's crazy, actually, to watch a white man argue with anybody, but argue with women,
about the fact that they're the only ones who can have babies.
It's insane in the society we live in because people want to vilify the white guy for not being woke,
not, you know, a caring enough, not wanting to watch the WNBA because it's not as good as the NBA,
whatever it might be, even if Caitlin Clark is uniquely interesting to watch.
And this is the version of propping women up, being like, you are special.
You do something we can't do and being like, how dare you, sir, no.
But even better than that is the argument that you really want to talk about this simplistic topic
instead of the more difficult things where we think we have more of an argument against the things you're going to say.
You really want to focus on the easiest thing.
Yeah. And the reason why is that if I can demonstrate the craziness of someone with a very obvious point, if I can say out loud that this person doesn't deserve respect medically because of their insanity and how they think about who does and who doesn't pop out a baby, then all that other stuff doesn't matter. I'm not going to take math lessons of an advanced level from a guy that can't add. If I sit down in the math class and the guy's like, all right, we're about to get into imaginary numbers. Before we do that, just a quick demonstration.
of the capability I have as your math professor, two plus two equals seven.
I get up and I just leave.
I just leave the room.
And I'm like, we're good.
It's fine.
Because again, I doubt that he got an actual degree from any sort of real place.
And that's essentially the argument the left is trying to make here is that you need to listen to the more complex points that we're having, that we're discussing based on this person or people of the CDC.
And we don't want you to focus on the very obvious easy one that discredits the whole rest of the conversation because we don't want that.
We don't like that part.
All right.
One last thing I do want to say.
And I have a bunch of audio.
I'm choosing not to play it.
And not because I want to shy away from this topic.
I think it's vitally important that you defend people of faith from the attacks that
are happening right now to them, whether those are just simple verbal attacks of people saying
that thoughts and prayers are inappropriate after a horrible thing happens in society or the
actual attacks as more data is showing that more churches are the target of, you know,
you know, a crime, a violent crime, something like two to three times the amount of churches
over the last two years have been the target of things like this compared to what we had seen
in the past three or four years combined.
And so as you say all that, as you reflect on being two days removed from another transgender
individual, a guy, a biological man, choosing to attack a school and children and a church,
a place that he had gone before, a place that he uniquely hated.
and in his manifesto says that he wants to see children in pain.
When you see all that, you just say to yourself how horrific it is
that this is a conduit for people to have a conversation
where they try to tear down religion,
because it does feel like the devil.
And again, I'm not trying to be overly religious on the show today.
I'm not trying to force that down your throat if you're someone that doesn't care
about this sort of thing.
But there is no better example to me of the power,
of any sort of side of, you know, good and evil that wants to tear down good than trying to say
that prayer, something that actually the victims of the tragedy are asking for, is an inappropriate
solution or an inappropriate, you know, path to at least being emotionally maybe capable of
healing. At some point, who knows when, if families are even capable of doing that, but through
prayer, through faith, being able to go that road to do it, saying that that's, that's useless.
saying that the kids were already praying in the church and didn't do anything like all the
horrible things they say about it to vilify religion only makes that worse. And so it does
seem to be important as a pundit to want to come out and defend a religion and people who
have a belief in faith today because it does feel like a conversation between, you know,
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And now, all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick 5.
That's right.
It's time for the Quick 5 on the Dana Show.
My name is Craig Collins filling in, D-Lash, Dana Lash Radio and X on Twitter.
Micah Parsons is now a Green Bay Packer.
He's no longer Dallas Cowboy,
and many people are calling it the worst trade in the history of Cowboys,
team history.
It's hilarious to me.
And here's the thing.
The Cowboys should have traded this player
or at least demonstrated a willingness to trade this player
several months ago.
Let's say four or five months ago
because of the unique talent of this guy,
the ability for teams to compete over getting that talent,
thinking that there might be a chance
that he stays in Dallas or he goes elsewhere.
The worst kept secret in football
is Micah desperately wanted off of this team
so much so that the guy started eating nachos
when he's supposed to be playing
during the NFL preseason.
I know this isn't a sport show, by the way.
I'm just quickly trying to talk about this.
I think it's interesting that the Cowboys
continue to spiral
and that Jerry Jones might be the catalyst
to a lot of that spiraling at this point.
He hires head coaches
that seem like they'll just listen
to whatever he wants them to do.
He puts himself in front of cameras
and microphones at a time
when most owners would be very quiet
about a star player
having a contract dispute publicly reacting to the things that Michael wanted was not a good way to retain the player,
which they would know, which made things worse and crazier. And so at the end of the day, I just kind of feel sad.
I'm not a Cowboys fan. Far from it, actually. But I do think that when the Cowboys are good, that helps the NFL.
And when the Cowboys are bad, that hurts the NFL. And this trade hurts the Cowboys and thus the NFL for a while.
It's going to be a bit.
company is managed by Jordan Hudson, his 20-something-year-old girlfriend.
And that's hilarious to me.
This company also did file a trademark for gold digger.
And I think they're going to be making some jewelry and some key chains and whatnot that have a gold digger as a part of them.
So apparently, Bill and his 20-something-year-old girlfriend think that the jokes about her being a gold digger are funny enough to monetize them to make money off of it.
a guy in his 70s dating a woman in her 20s,
I'm never going to judge the dude because that's a unique thing.
And a lot of guys in that part of their life would also love to have someone of that age be romantically tied to them.
And if that even means that they're there for the money and not for the love,
I think at some point you might not care about that anymore.
I love saying that out loud too because there are people that get up in arms and mad about it.
I even have a family member that told me how disgusting the whole thing is, how gross it is.
And yeah, for Jordan, it's probably not ideal.
I would think that it's not great.
But if you're Bill Belichick or envisioning yourself someday being Bill Belichick's age,
Rose is not the word I think of when he gets a shot to be in a relationship with her.
Again, even if he's helping her create a certain jewelry and whatnot.
And it seems to be leaning in to the thing a whole lot of people assume is already happening anyway.
I feel bad for Bill Belichick.
That's a thing I can say out there.
But I don't think that he's the one participating in the gross activity.
All right. Another thing out there, a hacker used AI to automate an unprecedented cybercrime spree. This is according to several experts. It's scary how easily this was done and how AI can enhance the crime spree to make it much quicker than a human could do it and much more significant. Essentially, if you ask AI, hey, help me with this crime spree thing I want to do, it pops up the little paper clip and it goes, how would you like me to do that for you? What things do you need to get done?
and then you go from there.
Yet another version of how AI is probably going to ruin our society,
not help our society,
and most of us should be terrified about, you know,
Skynet at some point taking over.
One final thing,
China is building a brain computer interface industry,
which also seems bad.
It also seems like the kind of thing you might not actually want,
and China, of all places,
the, you know, location trying to do this.
Look, I will readily admit,
on this very show, filling in for Dana, that aspects of becoming a cyborg or some version of
half machine, half man intrigue me. I would like power and capability. I'd like to be a superhero,
essentially, whether it's mentally and or physically, and if machines can help get me there,
part of me is willing to change, or at least consider changing the natural body that I currently
have. And yet the other part of me realizes how easy this stuff is hacked. And the last thing I'd ever
want to do is have like my computer eyeball hacked in a bad way. I laugh as I say that,
but it would be terrible. And so putting computers in your brain or using interfaces that interact
with your brain seems like a really bad idea. And a lot of us know it. A lot of us are saying it,
but darn it, the magic of feeling superhuman is also out there. That's the temptation. Maybe you let
several people barrel through this rabbit hole before you even try it. And even then you're probably
doomed. We're all doomed.
I see an AI story right now.
The first thing I do is look to see the moment where I'm pretty sure we're doomed.
And if it's not there, I take a nice breath.
If it is there, which it usually is, I'm like, all right, great, another one of those.
Another thing I want to play, and I think this is interesting.
It's definitely not political news, but who cares?
An Irish traveler, an influencer, is being blasted online after they recorded and posted
video of what they claim to be a cannibal tribe that may or may not be cannibal.
It is a remote tribe.
There was a representative for the tribe trying to tell the influencer they weren't welcome to do video here.
A lot of aspects in this story are moving pieces.
First, if they actually are cannibals, I really don't care what their, you know, spokesperson is asking for.
If they're not cannibals, I don't know.
I am annoyed by the influencer traveling to a certain place and trying to get a lot of clicks.
The influencer doesn't have any real desire to help anybody.
they just have a desire to be more famous
and they thought this was an avenue toward it.
But there is some audio that goes with this story
of the Irish traveling
social media, you know,
influencer person trying to
uncover the remote cannibal tribe
and put it all over social media for views and whatnot.
This is weird.
I almost want no one to win
in this, you know, this side versus that side.
Because again, I'm not going to cheer for the cannibals
if that's what they actually are.
And I'm not a big fan of
lot of the influencers. Here we go.
I think they're going to go and air of that, I suppose.
This is terrifying. They're huge bulls.
I've got an offering for them.
Basically bargain our way and try and make them accept us.
Put it in my hands?
Open it and then just put in your hands a little bit.
Oh, God. Okay, he doesn't look like he likes that.
Careful.
He doesn't like it. All right, guys, let's move back, maybe.
We have to go out.
He's not into that.
Not really welcome. It's really dangerous.
I'm not going to lie. That is absolutely terrifying.
Damn, they're scary.
I'm sorry, I'd take you here.
Yeah, that's real stupid, by the way.
That sounds a lot like, and I'm not trying to crap on somebody else, but the crocodile
hunter, whenever he was in front of a crocodile saying like, this crocodile seems mad, I'm going to
make it angrier.
The crocodile hunter, may he rest in peace as someone that definitely seemed to be willing to
risk his life.
I think the same is true of a social media influencer who wants to out the cannibal tribe
in a remote part of the world.
That seems like a dumb thing.
And I don't know why the frat guy reaction of these two kids made me laugh even more.
Thank God they're okay.
But they're like, yeah, they don't really like that.
Yeah, they seem mad at us.
They're getting their bows and arrows out, and things seem like they could get scary fast.
Yeah, they could.
These people would have no hesitation in harming you if they believe that you're someone who's a threat to them
because society used to work that way for quite some time in the past, and they haven't changed.
So I just don't get any part of this.
If I was the influencer or the team that's supposed to advise this influencer, if it exists,
when they got to the idea about trying to infiltrate the cannibal,
remote tribe, I'd be like, no, let's not do that one. Let's do anything else. Let's do a marshmallow
eating challenge instead of going to the remote tribe and seeing if they, in fact, eat people. That seems like a
bad choice for our Saturday night. Thanks for tuning in to today's edition of Dana Lash's
absurd truth podcast. If you haven't already, make sure to hit that subscribe button on Apple Podcast,
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